-
15 votes
-
US Federal Trade Commission sues insulin middlemen, saying they pocket billions while patients face high costs
37 votes -
A judge ruled a Louisiana prison’s health care system has failed inmates for decades. A federal law could block reforms.
15 votes -
US lawyers warned plastics makers to prepare for a wave of litigation over "forever chemicals" that could dwarf asbestos
27 votes -
Philips agrees to pay $1 billion to patients who say they were injured by breathing machines
31 votes -
A group of Indigenous women in Greenland has sued Denmark for forcing them to be fitted with intrauterine contraceptive devices in the 1960s and 70s
29 votes -
Research at the heart of a US lawsuit against the abortion pill has been retracted
28 votes -
EBay will pay $59 million settlement over pill presses sold online as US undergoes overdose epidemic
10 votes -
A quiet merger trial between antitrust enforcers and a pharma data giant called IQVIA reveals how bro-style executives control US medical data
13 votes -
Can doctors in England detain you under the Mental Health Act if they've only met you in MS Teams? (No, not any more)
14 votes -
US court orders Balance of Nature to stop sales of supplements after FDA lawsuits
7 votes -
US lawsuit on behalf of deceased patients alleges United Health denies care based on AI model with ninety percent error rate
52 votes -
Monsanto hit with $175m verdict against Roundup – a string of nine- and ten-figure losses for the popular herbicide
27 votes -
Meta accused by states of using features to lure children to Instagram and Facebook
18 votes -
Dozens of Greenlandic women who say they were fitted with the contraceptive coil without their consent or knowledge are planning to sue the Danish state
26 votes -
The long, hard fight over the first cosmetic penis implant
17 votes -
US Federal Trade Commission sues private equity firm for price fixing anesthesia services in Texas
8 votes -
Women who were denied emergency abortions file lawsuits in three states: Lawsuits want to clarify abortion ban exceptions for ‘medical emergencies’ in Idaho, Oklahoma and Tennessee
36 votes -
How one doctor in the USA keeps practicing, despite a long string of sanctions, fines, and lawsuits
30 votes -
Thermo Fisher Scientific settles with family of Henrietta Lacks, whose HeLa cells uphold medicine
26 votes -
US health insurance giant Cigna sued over algorithm allegedly used to deny coverage to hundreds of thousands of patients
27 votes -
A new ACLU lawsuit alleges that Washington DC is discriminating against people with mental health disabilities by continuing to send armed officers to mental health calls
https://theappeal.org/dc-police-mental-health-crisis-response-aclu-lawsuit/ The American Civil Liberties Union of Washington, D.C., filed a lawsuit in federal court Thursday alleging that the...
https://theappeal.org/dc-police-mental-health-crisis-response-aclu-lawsuit/
The American Civil Liberties Union of Washington, D.C., filed a lawsuit in federal court Thursday alleging that the district’s practice of sending police officers—instead of mental health specialists—to mental health emergencies violates the Americans with Disabilities Act.
“Someone who calls 911 for a physical health emergency gets trained medical providers who can treat and stabilize them,” said Susan Mizner, director of the ACLU’s Disability Rights Program, in a press release. “But someone who calls 911 for a mental health emergency gets a police officer with handcuffs and a gun.”
According to the lawsuit, these differing responses constitute a breach of the Americans with Disabilities Act, which prohibits government entities from denying people with disabilities equal access to government services and programs. The ACLU is suing on behalf of Bread for the City, a local nonprofit that provides healthcare and social services to lower-income and unhoused communities.
31 votes -
Covid backlash hobbles US public health and future pandemic response
8 votes -
Ninety-four women allege a Utah doctor sexually assaulted them. Here’s why a judge threw out their case.
10 votes -
Steak dinners, sales reps and risky procedures: Inside the big business of clogged arteries
6 votes -
UnitedHealthcare tried to deny coverage to a chronically ill US patient. He fought back, exposing the insurer’s inner workings.
15 votes -
Nursing homes are suing friends and family to collect on patients' bills
9 votes -
Sacklers raise their offer to settle opioid lawsuits by more than $1 billion
7 votes -
Two disbarred lawyers sued a Texas doctor who performed an abortion. Flustered ‘pro-lifers’ are backpedaling
12 votes -
A doctor who defied Texas' abortion law is sued, launching a legality test of the ban
20 votes -
The Sacklers, who made billions from OxyContin, win immunity from US opioid lawsuits
10 votes -
Japanese sex business operator sues state over virus cash handout snub
7 votes -
US states seek $2.2 trillion from OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma: filings
15 votes -
A spate of new class-action lawsuits threaten the CBD industry. Will they force Washington to act?
4 votes -
University of Virginia health system sues thousands of patients, seizing paychecks and putting liens on homes
14 votes -
'This case will set a precedent': First major opioid trial to begin in Oklahoma
4 votes -
OxyContin maker explored expansion into “attractive” anti-addiction market
7 votes -
Damning court docs show just how far Sacklers went to push OxyContin
8 votes -
Sackler family members face mass litigation and criminal investigations over opioids crisis
4 votes -
Sackler family members face mass litigation, criminal investigations over opioids crisis
7 votes -
Indigenous women kept from seeing their newborn babies until agreeing to sterilization, says lawyer
22 votes -
Aetna ordered to pay $25.5 million after denying coverage to woman who died of cancer
13 votes -
US jury rules Monsanto liable in weed killer case - ordered to pay $250,000,000 for causing cancer
12 votes -
Monsanto ordered to pay $289 million in world's first Roundup cancer trial
17 votes